French eco-conscious footwear brand Zeta has expanded its range to include smart shoes with its latest collection, Saudade, which it is showcasing at its pop-up at 3, rue Sainte-Croix-de-la-Bretonnerie, in Paris’s Marais, from November 5 until December 29, 2025.
Zeta steps into Paris with a year-end pop-up – Zeta
This move is very recent and, in its first two months, the new product category accounted for 20% of sales. It has also increased the number of Zeta’s manufacturing partners, with the brand producing exclusively in Portugal. It now works with five factories: two dedicated to trainers and three to shoes (loafers, ballet flats, and smart shoes). The brand also plans to include sandals in its next summer collection.
Portuguese at heart
When Laure Babin talks about Portugal, her long-standing attachment to the country is clear. This bond has been forged over the course of the Zeta adventure. Today, the entrepreneur and designer travels there several times a year, and the manufacturers have become ‘friends’. She is also supported in the creative process by a professional based in Portugal. The brand’s latest collection, entitled ‘Saudade’ (‘nostalgia’ in Portuguese), is inspired by the country’s time-honoured craftsmanship.
The brand presents its latest collection, entitled ‘Saudade’ – Zeta
Zeta’s creative approach is complemented by collaborations- for example with ready-to-wear label Émoi Émoi in 2024. Laure Babin also plans to announce a new collaborative release soon. Her dream partnership is to work with Flotte and develop rain-ready versions of the brand’s shoes. The brand also boasts a ready-to-wear range of essentials and recycled fleece jackets.
From grape pomace to coffee grounds
This stronger presence in Portugal is linked to the brand’s sustainability commitments, which have set it apart through the use of materials derived from agricultural waste. It began with grape pomace (for leather), then maize (for textiles), before collaborating with Nespresso on coffee grounds in 2022. After eight months’ work with a Portuguese manufacturer, the brand secured exclusive rights to the material for one year, before its availability was opened up to other market players. In 2023, the brand decided to move into leather made from olive pomace, the name given to the waste from oil production.
The brand bases all its production in Portugal – Zeta
With these commitments, Zeta hopes to secure B Corp certification and entreprise à mission status in 2026, as it prepares its applications. Securing these labels would mark a major step forward for this Bordeaux-based brand, founded in 2020 by Laure Babin, then a master’s student in management at IAE Bordeaux. Incubated at the Cité Numérique de Bègles in Nouvelle-Aquitaine during its first year of activity, the start-up was launched thanks to a crowdfunding campaign, enabling it to sell 3,000 pairs of shoes. Today, Zeta has grown, and is driven by a team of eight, regularly supported by freelancers.
Footwear, an important lever for sustainable action
Why shoes? The answer is simple: footwear is typically polluting and universally consumed. It therefore represents a powerful lever for sustainable action. More than five years after its founding, the eco-conscious label is distributed in France, Italy, the US, and Asia through a network of 70 retailers. Born as a DNVB, Zeta was able to move into wholesale from its first year, with the support of the Cité du Vin in Bordeaux, which still sells its shoes. While the post-Covid era brought a new lease of life to physical retail, Zeta is now reinvesting in digital, at a time when the market is tightening.
Zeta tests the waters in Paris, where its target clientele is concentrated – Zeta
Even so, its Paris pop-up is an opportunity to test a direct presence in the French capital- favourable ground for its development, since Zeta’s target is urban 30- to 35-year-olds in the CSP+ bracket. ‘The response has been very positive so far,’ says Laure Babin. The pop-up enables the brand to meet its customers and reach an international clientele, showcasing its bestsellers and winter collection. This year, for the first time since its creation, the brand faced the issue of dormant stock and took part in Black Friday to clear it.
Protecting sustainable European businesses
‘We’re well established in the trainers sector,’ says Laure Babin, despite an ‘uncertain’ climate marked by falling purchasing power and unfair competition. Zeta has joined the complaint against Shein brought by the Fédération Française du Prêt-à-Porter Féminin (FFPAPF). This competitive pressure is particularly tough for the label, which intends to keep production in Portugal.
The brand now sells loafers, ballet flats and smart shoes – Zeta
At the end of 2024, the company organised its first fundraising round and raised €600,000, from its community but also from figures such as William Hauvette (founder of Asphalte), Philippe Berland (former CEO of La Redoute), and some of the founders of the green bank Green-Got. A crucial boost to accelerate its operations.
For the 2025 financial year, which ended last August, the company achieved annual growth of 20%, despite profitability challenges. Sales momentum is set to accelerate in the current financial year, reaching +70% by August 2026.
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Pacsun announced on Thursday it plans to opens its first Dubai store in early 2026, after the U.S. retailer open nine domestic stores in 2025 with 20-35 slated to open across the U.S. next year.
Pacsun
The debut flagship Dubai store will be Pacsun’s first international location in its 40-year history, and comes after the retailer revealed it had inked a new regional partnership in the Middle East with Majid Al Futtaim, earlier this month.
Under the agreement, Pacsun said it plans to open up to 20 stores across the Middle East over the next five years, including another flagship location in Abu Dhabi.
The Dubai location comes on the back of two recent store openings across the U.S. — in New York City and Westchester — as the Los Angeles-based retailer looks to capitalise on double-digit growth in in-store traffic.
Looking ahead, the brand plans to add 20–35 new stores over the next three years, with nine leases already signed for 2026 — making next year the biggest domestic retail expansion for the company in nearly two decades.
“Our stores have become cultural touch points for a generation that values experience as much as product. What begins on our social channels—inspiration and community—ultimately drives young people to see it in person. Doubling down on brick-and-mortar simply reflects what our community is already telling us,” said Brieane Olson, chief executive officer, Pacsun.
Earlier this month, PacSun launched a curated resale shop, introducing PS Vintage Powered by Springy, a dedicated collection of thousands of one-of-a-kind vintage pieces for men and women.
Montpellier-based group Socri Limited has announced a change of identity to become Ceiba, a name registered in around thirty countries to support the group’s international ambitions.
Ceiba
The group notably operates the Polygone shopping centres in Béziers and Montpellier, the Galeries Lafayette department stores in Avignon and Béziers, and the La Coupole shopping centre in Nîmes.
“Ceiba is a logical step,” explained its chairman, Nicolas Chambon. “We are not changing what we do; we are embracing what we have become. This new name allows us to assert an identity that is clear, committed, and true to our values.”
The name Ceiba, taken from the sacred Latin American tree, had already been used by the group’s U.S. subsidiary. Its adoption at group level “forms part of a deliberate international trajectory,” according to the company, which was founded in 2023.
The company’s new logo – Ceiba
The group’s Nîmes shopping centre recently welcomed the opening of a Galeries Lafayette store, inaugurated on October 2. The opening is reported to have delivered a 45% increase in footfall at the 13,500-square-metre shopping centre at the start of autumn.
MadaLuxe Group on Thursday said it has acquired fine jewelry brand Ippolita, as the U.S. lifestyle group looks to bolster its portfolio and expand into the fine jewelry category.
Ippolita
Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Under the deal, founder of Ippolita, Ippolita Rostagno, will continue in her role as chief creative officer, overseeing all aspects of design across the brand’s jewelry collections.
“I founded Ippolita with the belief that fine jewelry should celebrate the artistry of the hand and honor the individuality of the women who wear it,” said Rostagno. “Joining MadaLuxe Group opens an exciting new chapter—one that allows us to protect our heritage while embracing meaningful opportunities for growth. I am delighted to continue guiding the brand’s creative vision as we reach an even broader global audience.”
Launching in 1999 exclusively at Bergdorf Goodman, Ippolita is known for its sculptural jewelery that blends contemporary design with Italian craftsmanship. Today, the brand is sold through leading luxury retailers and boutiques worldwide.
“We are thrilled to welcome Ippolita into the MadaLuxe Group family,” said Adam Freede, CEO and co-founder of MadaLuxe Group, which added it will support the New York fine jewelry brand’s continued growth across key markets worldwide.
“Ippolita is an iconic brand with a rich artistic heritage, extraordinary customer loyalty, and a timeless visual vocabulary. We see significant opportunity to drive brand growth through strategic support and investment. Above all, we saw a great chance to add someone as talented as Ippolita to the MadaLuxe family, who views the importance of people and company culture the same way that we do.”